OGG Video Converter

OGG/OGV Theora Converter, WebM/VP8 Converter

OGG Video Converter

OGG Video Converter converts any video
formats to OGG/OGM/OGV (Theora + Vorbis)
file. The OGG file is recommended by HTML5 specification for embedding
video and audio in HTML documents. Besides OGG file, the converter converts files
to H.264 and WebM (VP8
+ Vorbis) that are HTML5 video formats either. The major web browsers support
either OGG, H.264, or WebM, for example, Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, Safari,
and Opera. In other word, the program is also a HTML5 video converter / encoder
that could embed video on your website
using HTML5 easily.

OGG Video Converter supports more
than 100 video and audio formats, and converts file to popular file formats
such as 3GP, AVI, FLV, Android, iPhone,
iPad, MKV, MOV, MP4,
MPG, WMV, Xvid, and so on. The software also converts
video to audio such as MP3, AAC, Vorbis, WAV, WAV, etc. The converter
could extract every frame of video to image files such as BMP,
JPG/JPEG, PNG, and TIFF.

OGG Video Converter supports batch conversion.
You could convert bulk of video and audio files to another format
at a time. The software is full compatible with 32-bit and 64-bit editions of
Windows 10/8/7/Vista/XP/2000.

OGG is a free, open
standard container format maintained by the Xiph.Org Foundation. The creators
of the Ogg format claim that it is unrestricted by software patents and is designed
to provide for efficient streaming and manipulation of high quality digital multimedia.

The name "Ogg" refers to the file format which can multiplex a number
of separate independent free and open source codecs for audio, video, text (such
as subtitles), and metadata.

In the Ogg multimedia framework, Theora provides a lossy video layer, while
the music-oriented Vorbis codec most commonly acts as the audio layer. The human
speech compression codec Speex, lossless audio compression codec FLAC, and OggPCM
may also act as audio layers.

The term "Ogg" is commonly used to refer to audio file format Ogg
Vorbis, that is, Vorbis-encoded audio in the Ogg container. Previously, the .ogg
file extension was used for any content distributed within Ogg, but as of 2007,
the Xiph.Org Foundation requests that .ogg be used only for Vorbis due to backward
compatibility concerns. The Xiph.Org Foundation decided to create a new set of
file extensions and media types to describe different types of content such as
.oga for audio only files, .ogv for video with or without sound (including Theora),
and .ogx for applications.

Because the format is free, and its reference implementation is non-copylefted,
Ogg's various codecs have been incorporated into a number of different free and
proprietary media players, both commercial and non-commercial, as well as portable
media players and GPS receivers from different manufacturers.

Customizes a new format that contains multiple output formats. It's very useful
if you need OGG Video Converter to convert a file to more than one format at a time.
For example, you can create a new format "HTML5 Videos" that contains H.264, OGV, and
WebM (VP8).

Adds option to create an output folder for each source file

Adds options to keep date/time created or modified of original

Adds option to fix out of sync of audio

Chooses different audio stream for output if the source file contains multiple audio streams such as DVD or Blu-ray disc